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Effects of 4 hand-drying methods for removing bacteria from washed hands: a randomized trial

Authors :
Myron D. Maker
Daniel R. Gustafson
Dirk R. Larson
Emily A. Vetter
Duane M. Ilstrup
Rodney L. Thompson
Franklin R. Cockerill
Source :
Mayo Clinic proceedings. 75(7)
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

• O b j e c t i v e: To evaluate the effects of 4 different drying methods to remove bacteria from washed hands. • Subjects and Methods : One hundred adult volunteers participated in this randomized prospective study. All bacterial counts were determined using a modified glove-juice sampling procedure. The difference was determined between the amounts of bacteria on hands artificially contaminated with the bacterium Micrococcus luteus before washing with a nonantibacterial soap and after drying by 4 different methods (cloth towels accessed by a rotary dispenser, paper towels from a stack on the hand-washing sink, warm forced air from a mechanical handactivated dryer, and spontaneous room air evaporation). The results were analyzed using a nonparametric analysis (the Friedman test). By this method, changes in bacterial colonyforming unit values for each drying method were ranked for each subject. • Results: The results for 99 subjects were evaluable. No statistically significant differences were noted in the numbers of colony-forming units for each drying method (P=.72). • Conclusion: These data demonstrate no statistically significant differences in the efficiency of 4 different hand-drying methods for removing bacteria from washed hands.

Details

ISSN :
00256196
Volume :
75
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mayo Clinic proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....31530ac480f2067bab0a0627292a9e1b